Mr & Mrs
Taylor live in a house on a hill served by a system of concrete stairs so
complex you’d think you’d blundered into a landscape by Escher. We go up to go
down to go up again. None of it makes sense.
‘And I bet he’s
upstairs,’ says Rae.
Early morning,
last hour of the night shift. A heavy lift will probably kill us.
I ring the bell.
An elderly woman
shuffles to the door with her zimmer.
‘Can you come in
and help him, please?’ says Mrs Taylor. ‘Only I can’t get him up. I’m not good
myself.’
Stan is sitting
scrunched up on the floor of the little downstairs bathroom. He fell over when
he went to spend a penny at eleven o’clock at night, and he’s been there ever
since. But Stan is a heavy man; at least eighteen stone, his torso a great
conical lump with a couple of stringy legs hanging from the base.
‘Get me back to
my chair’ he says, puffing and blowing.
We have to slide
him backwards to give ourselves some room. He yelps and swears.
‘Where’s that hurting?’
I ask him.
But he ignores the
question and waves his hands speculatively in the air.
‘Why won’t you put
me back in my chair?’
‘Oh, no, don’t
put him back in his chair,’ says Mrs Taylor, watching from the sitting room
doorway. ‘He’s stuck in that thing all day, all night. He won’t even use the
bathroom. He just sits there and wets.’
‘Get me back to
my chair,’ says Stan.
‘I can’t cope,’
she carries on. ‘I can’t. He won’t have the doctor in. He won’t take his pills.
He won’t use his frame. He just sits and sits and sits. And wets. I think he’s
going a bit...’ she taps her forehead with a bony finger. ‘You know.’
‘I’m not going
to hospital,’ Stan puffs. ‘Just get me up, will you? What are you waiting for?’
‘You feel hot to
me. Are you hot, Stan?’
‘Why are you
leaving me on the floor? Why don’t you help me up?’
Rae comes back
in with the Mangar inflatable cushion.
‘What’s that?’
says Stan.
‘It’s a device for
getting you off the floor. You’re too big for us to just pick you up.’
‘Am I?’
‘Unfortunately,
yes. But this is good. Look. It goes under here – if you could just shuffle
backwards a bit...’
He yelps and
screams again.
‘What’s up, Stan?
Where’s that hurting?’
He grumbles, but
doesn’t tell us.
We start to
inflate the Mangar. Despite warning him what to expect and what he has to do as
the cushions inflate, he reacts to the whole business with the same level of uncoordinated,
hoofing panic you might see in a cow being hoisted out of a ditch. With a great
deal of counterbalancing and bracing, we manage to inflate all four cushions
without Stan falling off, and then help him to stand. He clutches on to the
door of the bathroom, his spindly legs buckling.
I fetch a wooden
chair in from the sitting room.
‘I took the
cushion off,’ says his wife. ‘He’ll just wet it.’
‘I’m not going
to hospital’ Stan says, collapsing back into the chair. ‘Why have you put me in
this thing?’
‘Because you
obviously can’t walk through to the sitting room and I don’t want you falling
over again.’
‘Just help me up
and I’ll be all right. I’m not going to the hospital.’
‘We can’t very
well leave you here like this, Stan. Now – if you can prove to me that you can
get yourself up and walk through to the sitting room, fine, I’ll leave you
alone. If not, it’s the hospital and no question about it.’
He tries to
stand up again, but his legs will not support him. He keeps a grip on to the
doorframe, though, and looks at me to see that I’ve understood.
It’s looking
increasingly as if we’re going to be stuck here for hours, and we’re off duty
in a few minutes. Rae calls Control and asks for a second crew. We’re going to
need help lifting Stan up and down those concrete stairs – and then they can take
him to hospital whilst we clear up and hurry back to base.
‘They’re sending
a reserve crew,’ she says, hanging up.
‘A what?’ says
Stan. ‘I’m not going to hospital.’
‘You go with
these nice people!’ says his wife, glaring at him from her zimmer frame, as homicidally
furious as Davros of the Daleks. ‘You can’t go on like this, Stan. You can’t!’
There’s the
sound of boots on the concrete steps outside.
The fight seems
to go out of him.
I slap him reassuringly
on the shoulder. ‘Don’t worry, Stan. It’s only for a check-up. I reckon you’ve
got a little urinary tract infection and it’s making you weaker than normal.
You need a thorough-going overhaul. Wash and brush-up ,tuppence. Maybe they can
get someone in to look at the house, and see if there’s not stuff that can be
done to make it easier for you generally. With any luck they’ll discharge you
later today. But you absolutely have to go, Stan, because to be honest – you’re
so weak, if I left you now you’d fall over again and then where would you be?’
‘On the floor,’
he says.
A knock on the
door. A friendly face.
‘Hello! Who’ve
we got here, then?’
Stan submits to the carry-chair,
and we all struggle outside to the truck.
7 comments:
That firm desire to not be taken from our home is so universal that it just breaks my heart when we have to take someone out - even for their own good. We had a case where the lady stepped out for a loaf of bread, got dizzy and never saw her home again. Social services stepped in and took her to a facility and then the system took over. Sad and tragic and yet like you say, "What have we got then?" A person on the floor and that's no good either. it's hard, isn't it?
Yay for help arriving!
I think this is my favorite post yet, for two reasons. One, you reference Escher. Two, "as homicidally furious as Davos of the Daleks". Stan sounds like a pain in the rear, but the write up is brilliant. I'm glad you got out of there in decent time.
Lynda - With any luck Stan'll be back home once they've got the UTI under control (if that's what it is) and there've been a few visits to improve the situation there. So hopefully he'll have a few more years at home. I suppose the hard truth is that unless you die at home, the chances are it'll become increasingly difficult to stay there with all the extra demands your failing health will make on the place. I never like hauling people out who don't want to go, but then again, I'd hate to think of them falling and really hurting themselves. It is hard, no question. In the ambulance we often tend to think of things in a very practical, pragmatic way (often because there's no time or we're too tired to think about it in any other way).
tpals - Yay for us! (Although that's not quite the phrase Stan would've used...)
Cassandra - Escher's drawings are incredible. Nightmares of perspective. I don't know anything about him - I wonder what he was like! Stan was a pain, no question, and even though his wife's diagnosis was a bit abrupt (the dementia thing), I don't doubt she was near the mark. We did manage to finish just half an hour over, which was a result, all in all.
Thanks for all your comments! :)
I'm put in mind of Hieronymus Bosch Spence.
Welcome to the garden of earthly delights.
"he reacts to the whole business with the same level of uncoordinated, hoofing panic you might see in a cow being hoisted out of a ditch."
fabulous!
Lydia :)
Jacks - Stop me if I've mentioned this before, but... the dentist I used to go to when I was a kid had a poster of that Bosch painting on the ceiling above the chair. Hmmm.
Lydia - Thanks v much! ;)
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